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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2015 Apr 1.
Published in final edited form as: J Adolesc. 2014 Feb 15;37(3):269–279. doi: 10.1016/j.adolescence.2014.01.004

Table 4.

Effects of Amount of Prenatal Cocaine Exposure on Adolescent Self-Reported Externalizing Behavior at 15 Years

Model 1
Model 2
b (se) β p b (se) β p
Prenatal cocaine exposure1 1.02 (.43) .15 .02 .90 (.42) .14 .03
Child sex, male −1.96 (1.07) − .10 .07 −2.21 (1.05) − .11 .04
Birth maternal age − .21 (.10) − .12 .04 − .17 (.10) − .10 .09
Biologic mother’s GSI at birth 4.57 (1.65) .16 .005 3.63 (1.64) .13 .03
Prenatal alcohol exposure2 − .16 (.53) − .02 .76 − .22 (.52) − .03 .67
HOME score − .27 (.09) − .17 .001 − .29 (.08) − .19 < .001
Parental attachment − .49 (.90) − .03 .59 − .33 (.88) − .02 .71
Parental monitoring − .82 (.95) − .05 .39 − .70 (.93) − .04 .45
Violence exposure 2.03 (.51) .23 < .001 1.72 (.51) .20 < .001
Externalizing behavior at age 103 .15 (.04) .19 < .001

R2 .18 .21

Note. Variables that were tested but not included in the final model because they were not significant at p<.10 or didn’t cause substantial (>10%) change in the PCE coefficients are: birth mother education, parity, number of prenatal visits, maternal/caregiver vocabulary ability (PPVT-R), non-verbal reasoning (WAIS-R), adolescent age and race, prenatal tobacco and marijuana exposure, and blood lead level.

1

Cocaine units per week,

2

Average alcohol dose per week,

3

Caregiver report (CBCL)